Oefening op HTML 3 (Koen Van Cauwenberge)

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<>Golem uit The Lord of the Rings<>
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Lijst met ongenummerde opsommingstekens MET VIERKANTJES:
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<img ="afbeelding.gif" ="left">ZORG ERVOOR DAT DE AFBEELDING LINKS VAN DE TEKST VERSCHIJNT. “The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King” is a fabulous, awe-inspiring end, the conclusion to Peter Jackson’s interpretation of J.R.R. Tolkien’s saga.  Even if “The Fellowship of the Ring” and “The Two Towers” had not preceded it, “Return of the King” would rank among the greatest achievements of cinema.  It works on scales both massive and intimate. Epic battles contrast with the struggle for a single soul. Monstrous violence contrasts with
moments of solitary grace. Armies upon armies swarm across the screen, yet the fate of Middle-earth depends on whether a tiny person with the childish name of Frodo (Elijah Wood) will drop a ring into a volcano.

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<img ="afbeelding.jpg" ="right">ZORG ERVOOR DAT DE AFBEELDING RECHTS VAN DE TEKST VERSCHIJNT. Already divided in “Two Towers,” the characters are further split up as the final chapter develops. Frodo, joined by the ever loyal Sam (Sean
Astin) and the duplicitous Gollum (Andy Serkis voicing a character so real you forget he’s CGI), continues his journey to Mount Doom, where he must destroy the ring of power. But Sauron’s ring continues to corrupt Frodo, as it once did Gollum – a story that opens the film and allows us to see what Serkis looks like.  Knowing that Sauron will soon attack Minas Tirith, the last stronghold of Gondor, the wizard Gandalf (Ian McKellen) and the hobbit Pippin (Billy Boyd), ride ahead to warn Gondor’s ruler, Denethor (John Noble), who turns out to be Middle-earth’s answer to Nero.

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<img ="afbeelding.jpg"><br >ZORG ERVOOR DAT DE TEKST ONDER DE AFBEELDING BEGINT. Gimli the dwarf (John Rhys-Davies) and Legolas the elf (Orlando Bloom) join their companion Aragorn (Viggo Mortensen) on his journey along the
Paths of the Dead in hopes of recruiting a ghostly army. Meanwhile, the royal house of Rohan – King Theoden (Bernard Hill), Eomer (Karl Urban) and Eowyn (Miranda Otto) – ride against Sauron’s forces before the gates of Minas Tirith. Eowyn, who has disguised herself as a man, carries the hobbit Merry (Dominic Monaghan), on her horse.  As these storylines progress, the mystical elves – Elrond (Hugo Weaving), Galadriel (Cate Blanchett) and Arwen (Liv Tyler), who is Aragorn’s betrothed – appear to comment on, and sometimes aid in, good’s war against evil. The scope of the story is enormous, and not one second of movie’s three hours and 20 minute is wasted. Jackson’s greatest achievement is of balance. He knows when we need moments of reflection and when to reward us with pure visceral action.

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<="http://www.golem.com"><="afbeelding.jpg"><>AFBEELDING ALS LINK.
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